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The Washington Times Online Edition

HANSON: Back to Earth?

This artwork by Jennifer Kohnke relates to Obama's global stature and supprt.This artwork by Jennifer Kohnke relates to Obama’s global stature and supprt.

COMMENTARY:

Last week the United States got lucky again and took out several suspected terrorists by Predator drone attacks over Pakistan. Antiwar critics prior to Jan. 20 used to decry “collateral damage” from such controversial strikes. But there was a weird silence here about the Obama administration’s successful first attack - despite the usual complaints from abroad that several civilians perished.

President Barack Obama just announced, to great applause, that he wanted to close Guantanamo right away - sort of. But in the meantime he rightly worried over the immediate consequences. So, instead, in circumspect fashion, he appointed a “task force” to prepare for such closure within a year.

We forget that a less politically adept George Bush years ago conceded that he likewise wanted Guantanamo closed at some future date. But the media then, unlike now, largely ridiculed such pedestrian worries over what to do with unlawful wartime combatants who would either have to be released or tried as criminals in U.S. courts.

A saintly Barack Obama upon entering the presidency announced to great fanfare that he would once and for all stop revolving-door lobbyists and end shady business as usual in Washington. But during the transition and the first two weeks of governance, Mr. Obama’s team has already experienced a number of ethical problems of the sort that often plague incoming administrations.

Mr. Obama’s commerce secretary nominee, Gov. Bill Richardson, of New Mexico, has been under federal investigation and withdrew from consideration.

Attorney General designate Eric Holder, as Bill Clinton’s deputy attorney general, helped pardon a fugitive on the FBI’s most wanted list who was a big Clinton campaign donor.

Timothy Geithner, just confirmed as secretary of the Treasury, cannot adequately explain why he didn’t pay thousands of dollars in Social Security and Medicare taxes and took illegal tax deductions.

Mr. Obama’s staff already has already waived its new ethics rules for former Raytheon lobbyist William Lynn, who was nominated to be deputy defense secretary.

Such embarrassments sometime happen in politics - but to humans, not gods - and they often create media firestorms, not a mere flicker or two.

Throughout the campaign and after the Inauguration, Mr. Obama also talked grandly of bipartisanship. The fact he once had the most partisan record in the U.S. Senate, played tough Chicago-style politics to win elections and toed a strict liberal line in the Illinois legislature caused few in the media to wonder about such promises.

Yet despite aspiring to be an Olympian president, Mr. Obama just warned Republicans not to listen to earthy Rush Limbaugh. In words more like those of George W. Bush than of Mahatma Gandhi, Mr. Obama privately rubbed it in with, “I won.”

Despite the near-evangelical sermons, Mr. Obama, like most savvy presidents, assumes bipartisanship is the art of persuading - and coercing - the opposition into following his polices. Mr. Bush likewise called for an end to acrimony while he pushed his agenda. The only difference is that the media mocked the “divider” George Bush’s clumsy talk of bipartisanship but so far is still hypnotized by the “uniter” Barack Obama.

Why is Mr. Obama’s grand talk already at odds with his actions?

For one reason, he is unduly empowered by the media that too often root for him, rather than report critically about his actions.

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